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Profile
Rick Mathews, Principal
Saving the World --
One Tree, One Child at a Time
Profile of Rick Mathews
By Harold Higgins, Publisher of The Tribune
Published January 16, 2001
The Saturday morning host of KCBX public radio's Freedom Jazz Dance
is a 1960s surfer dude who felt he could save the world.
Thirty years older and wiser than when he was shredding the waves
in San Diego, Rick Mathews in many ways has become an icon of the
reckless surf boys of the 1960s who have grown up to take on responsibilities
for their families and small businesses while also channeling their
energy into community works.
Social good was an unarguable mission for Mathews. His father, who
was a supervisor in their Pomona Congregational Church made that familial
imprint.
So he was studying anthropology and sociology at San Diego State University
with the intent of going into teaching. But surfing and his own self-acknowledged
immaturity took him off course. Along the pathway over 30 years he
has changed locations, changed careers and changed aspirations but
kep his high school sweetheart, Valene.
Mathews owns Madrone Landscapes in Atascadero, a company that specializes
in residential and commercial landscaping that promotes the incorporation
of native California plants in its designs. His avocation is promoting
the health of Atascadero's urban forest and also the healthy community
environment of its children.
The name of his company, Madrone, is the common name of a native evergreen
tree that you can see on the Cuesta Grade. He felt the sound and the
image of the name evoked the flora of California. With his teaching
degree unfinished, but Valene on his arm, they settled in Santa Barbara
where Mathews became a landscape laborer. He met a guy who was landscaping
with native plants, and that experience opened up the promise for
Mathews that landscaping could serve an environmental purpose.
That inspired him to attend the ornamental horticulture program at
Cal Poly. And busy with a business and raising a family, he kept chipping
away at his bachelor's degree, which he got from Chapman University
after many months of night school at Vandenberg Air Force Base.
Over the years in Atascadero as his children, Cole and Lissa, have
moved through the school system, the family has become deeply ingrained
in their community. Mathews has been heavily involved with the Atascadero
Native Tree Association, youth basketball, youth skate park, the Atascadero
Youth Task Force and city Parks and Recreation Commission.
In 1999 he received a Community Service Award from the California
Parks and Recreation Society on behalf of the city of Atascadero.
Mathews is still trying to save the world, only now it is one tree
and one child at a time. And along the way there is a whole lot of
jazz.
Other Biographical Information
Rick Mathews
- B.A. Sociology, Chapman University
- California Contractors license #441779
- Horticulturist, Arborist, Urban Forester
- Certified Irrigation Auditor
- Environmental Education lecturer / facilitator
- Atascadero Parks and Recreation Commissioner 1998-2004
- Atascadero Recreation Center Committee Board of Directors, past
president
- Atascadero Native Tree Association, past president
- Atascadero Youth Task Force
- Community Service Award 2001
- California ReLeaf Network Board of Directors
- Atascadero Chamber of Commerce Community Service Award 1996
- California Parks and Recreation Society Community Service Award
1999
- Radio Producer/Announcer-KCBX fm 90.1 San Luis Obispo (NPR affiliate)
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